SWAMIJI'S TIME: J.K. SIVAN
THE CONSCIOUSNESS PLANES
We see, as human beings, that all our
knowledge which is called rational is referred to consciousness. My
consciousness of this table, and of your presence, makes me know that the table
and you are here. At the same time, there is a very great part of my existence
of which I am not conscious. All the different organs inside the body, the
different parts of the brain — nobody is conscious of these.
When I eat food, I do it
consciously; when I assimilate it, I do it unconsciously. When the food is
manufactured into blood, it is done unconsciously. When out of the blood all
the different parts of my body are strengthened, it is done unconsciously. And
yet it is I who am doing all this; there cannot be twenty people in this one
body. How do I know that I do it, and nobody else? It may be urged that my
business is only in eating and assimilating the food, and that strengthening
the body by the food is done for me by somebody else. That cannot be, because
it can be demonstrated that almost every action of which we are now unconscious
can be brought up to the plane of consciousness. The heart is beating
apparently without our control. None of us here can control the heart; it goes
on its own way. But by practice men can bring even the heart under control,
until it will just beat at will, slowly, or quickly, or almost stop. Nearly
every part of the body can be brought under control. What does this show? That
the functions which are beneath consciousness are also performed by us, only we
are doing it unconsciously. We
have, then, two planes in which the human mind works. First is the conscious
plane, in which all work is always accompanied with the feeling of egoism. Next
comes the unconscious plane, where all work is unaccompanied by the feeling of
egoism. That part of mind-work which is unaccompanied with the feeling of
egoism is unconscious work, and that part which is accompanied with the feeling
of egoism is conscious work. In the lower animals this unconscious work is
called instinct. In higher animals, and in the highest of all animals, man,
what is called conscious work prevails.
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